Cardiac stress testing is the most commonly used modality for diagnostic purposes in patients with known or suspected coronary artery disease (CAD). The utility of stress testing should be interpreted based on the likelihood of the disease. Patients with a low probability of disease have a high risk of false-positive results and may end up further unnecessary invasive testing without changing patient outcomes. Those with high pretest probability have a high risk of false-negative results that can miss a critical diagnosis; therefore, these patients should proceed directly to more confirmatory testing such as cardiac catheterization.
Stress testing is most clinically useful in intermediate-risk patients for CAD that will help further reclassify these patients into low risk and high-risk depending on the stress test result. Stress testing can also be used to obtain prognostic information to determine the patient's response to optical medical therapy, measure exercise capacity, evaluate ischemia who are already started on medical therapy for known CAD. In general exercise, stress is preferred because it provides a gauge of functional capacity, exercise tolerance, and symptom provocation.[1] Pharmacologic stress testing is an alternative modality in patients who are unable to exercise and with the following conditions:
Exercise stress testing is also not very helpful in patients with an insufficient hemodynamic response to exercise due to abnormalities involving the respiratory system, and having ongoing issues involving muscles, bones, and vessels in the peripheral system. Also, the exercise stress test is not useful when baseline EKG is abnormal such as with left ventricular hypertrophy (LVH), left bundle branch block (LBBB), paced rhythm, Wolff Parkinson White (WPW) syndrome, or greater than 1 mm ST-segment depression. These patients are suitable candidates for testing involving pharmacologic agents. Pharmacologic stress testing is used in combination with imaging modalities such as radionuclide imaging and echocardiography.
Pharmacological stress testing is a highly supervised procedure conducted under expert medical personnel supervision either in clinic or hospital. During the procedure, the patient will have electrodes attached to their chest, and also their vital signs are continuously monitored. The stress agent is injected through a peripheral intravenous line, which will increase blood flow through the coronary vasculature and mimic a response similar to exercise stress testing. Once a peak effect is attained, a small amount of radioactive material is inserted through the peripheral intravenous line. After that, a high-resolution gamma camera takes several pictures of the heart to get a better visualization of your coronary vasculature. During the resting phase, the gamma camera will take additional pictures which can be used as a comparison to the stress-induced perfusion imaging.
Vasodilator agents currently approved by the Food and Drug Administration (FDA) include:[1][3]
Vasodilators do not really stress the heart and create a coronary steal phenomenon by temporarily increasing blood flow to non-diseased vessels of the coronary vasculature at the expense of diseased vessels that can be visualized on nuclear imaging.
Regadenoson is a newer vasodilator agent approved by the FDA in 2008 and most routinely used today due to its selective action on A2A receptors and lesser side-effects.
Dobutamine is an alternative drug that acts as an inotrope and can be used in pharmacological stress testing. It is not approved by the FDA and rarely used currently. However, it can be used in patients who have contraindications to pharmacologic vasodilator stress agents such as in patients who have severe respiratory diseases like asthma or chronic obstructive pulmonary disease (COPD) or when regadenoson is not readily available for these patients.
Medications used for stress testing diagnosis include all of the following.
Adenosine
Adenosine acts on the coronary arteries through specific activation of the A2A receptor and causes them to dilate.[5][6] There are 4 types of adenosine receptors: A1, A2A, A2B, and A3.
Dose:
The dose of adenosine used during a pharmacologic stress testing is 140 mcg/kg/min, and it is given continuously for 6 minutes duration. The radioactive material is normally given at 3 minutes, and then adenosine is kept infusing for 3 more minutes. There is an additional methodology in which adenosine is given for 4 minutes as a continuous infusion, and its effects and outcomes are comparable to the continuous infusion lasting for 6 minutes.[7] Adenosine generally produces a modest increase in heart rate and a modest decrease in blood pressure. The infusion results in a 3.5- to 4-fold increase in coronary blood flow over baseline. The half-life of adenosine is less than 10 seconds.[1]
Limiting caffeine intake:
Methylxanthines such as theophylline or caffeine, block adenosine binding due to antagonistic action at A2A receptors and can reduce the coronary vasodilation effects of adenosine. Therefore, it is recommended to discontinue consumption of caffeine-containing medications, foods, or beverages for at least 12 hours and ideally 24 hours before adenosine stress testing.[8]
Contraindications:
Dipyridamole
Dipyridamole was the first vasodilator used for myocardial perfusion stress testing. It is an indirect coronary artery vasodilator. It increases the tissue levels of adenosine by preventing the intracellular reuptake of adenosine by inhibiting enzyme adenosine deaminase prolonging its vasodilator effect and increasing adenosine blood levels.[9][10]
Dipyridamole increases coronary blood flow to 3.8 to 7 times than baseline. The alpha half-life (the initial decline following peak concentration) is approximately 30 to 45 minutes. The beta-half life (the terminal decline in plasma concentration) is approximately 10 hours. It is metabolized in the liver to glucuronic acid conjugate and excreted in the bile.
Dipyridamole dose:
The dose of dipyridamole is 0.142 mcg/kg/min, or 0.57 mcg/kg.[9] Dipyridamole is infused over 4 min, with the radiotracer being injected 3 to 5 min after the completion of the dipyridamole infusion. Symptoms may last for a longer time than other vasodilators (15 to 25 minutes).
Side effects of dipyridamole:
Contraindications:
Regadenoson
Regadenoson is another direct coronary artery vasodilator, which is a selective A2A agonist. The affinity with which regadenoson binds with A2A is 10 times greater than its affinity to bind with the A1 receptor and even weaker affinity to bind with A2B and A3 receptors. Regadenoson produces maximal hyperemia quickly and maintains it for an optimal duration that is more practical for radionuclide myocardial perfusion imaging. Regadenoson's simple, rapid bolus administration in all patients, regardless of weight and short duration of hyperemic effect, has greatly simplified the method of stress testing as compared to adenosine and dipyridamole. It is the most commonly used currently due to lesser side effects and easier to perform.[11]
Regadenoson dose:
As mentioned earlier, the dosing of regadenoson is not weight-based like other vasodilators. The dose of regadenoson normally used is 0.4 mg, which is available only in a prefilled 5-ml syringe. The dose is immediately followed by a saline flush. The radiotracer is administered 10 to 20 seconds later, immediately followed by another saline flush.[12] The results of the ADVANCE MPI 2 trial have shown that regadenoson is non-inferior to adenosine for the detection of reversible defects and is safe and better tolerated.[13] The half-life of regadenoson is 2 hours.
Contraindications:
Reversal of vasodilator effects:
In patients who suffer from undesirable effects from pharmacologic stress testing agents, caffeine is given generally to counteract the effects. The use of caffeine in reversing the side effects is more beneficial in dipyridamole and regadenoson due to longer duration of action as compared to adenosine. Aminophylline can be used for more threatening side effects.
Dobutamine
Dobutamine is an inotropic agent that can be used for myocardial perfusion stress testing.[1] Dobutamine is not approved by the Food and Drug Administration for pharmacologic stress testing and rarely used currently. Dobutamine is a beta-agonist that results in the stimulation of beta1 and beta2 receptors.[14]
Dobutamine, like exercise, increases myocardial oxygen demand and evokes ischemia if there is insufficient perfusion to the affected myocardium that can be seen on stress echocardiography or nuclear imaging.
Beta-blockers should be held 24 hours before the dobutamine stress test due to the opposite antagonistic action.
Dobutamine dose:
Dobutamine is given as an infusion as an incremental dose beginning at 5 or 10 mcg/kg/min for 3 minutes. It is increased to 20, 30, and then 40 mcg/kg/min, also for 3-min intervals, for a maximum of 12 minutes or until the target heart rate is achieved. Radiotracer is injected at peak heart rate with dobutamine infusion continuing for one minute following tracer injection. The half-life of dobutamine is 2 to 3 min.
Indications:
Contraindications:
Pharmacological stress testing with myocardial perfusion imaging can help to detect perfusion or wall motion abnormalities that indicate either infarction (seen on stress and rest images) or ischemia (seen on stress images only). The utility of cardiac stress testing is determined in part by pretest disease probability; false-positive results may lead to potential downstream testing and treatment. Conversely, in patients with high CAD pretest probability, false-negative studies lead to a missed diagnosis. Therefore, the greatest use is in patients with intermediate CAD probability, in whom a positive test significantly increases disease likelihood, and negative test significantly decreases the likelihood. Depending on that, further testing, such as coronary angiography, can be considered.
1. Caffeine and methylxanthines intake within 12 hours prior to stress testing with vasodilator stress agents.
2. Beta-blockers taken in the last 24 hours if the patient is going for dobutamine stress testing.
Pharmacological stress testing is a relatively safe procedure with minimal side effects, but patients can occasionally suffer from undesirable side effects based on the mechanism of action of the pharmacologic stress agent used. Vasodilator agents, including adenosine, dipyridamole can produce bronchospasm and AV block. Less common with regadenoson due to its selective action. Dobutamine can cause tachyarrhythmias.
Caffeine is commonly offered to patients after the stress testing procedure, as it will likely reverse undesirable side effects. It is particularly helpful with regadenoson and dipyridamole, as they have a longer half-life than adenosine. More serious side effects can be treated with aminophylline, which is an adenosine receptor antagonist.[1] Beta-blockers can be used to treat side effects or toxicity caused by dobutamine.
In the majority of patients with an inability to exercise, pharmacologic stress testing is an essential diagnostic modality and widely used for the evaluation of ischemia and coronary artery disease (CAD). It is also used to assess prognosis in individuals with known CAD.[15]
[1] | Henzlova MJ,Duvall WL,Einstein AJ,Travin MI,Verberne HJ, Erratum to: ASNC imaging guidelines for SPECT nuclear cardiology procedures: Stress, protocols, and tracers. Journal of nuclear cardiology : official publication of the American Society of Nuclear Cardiology. 2016 Jun; [PubMed PMID: 26961077] |
[2] | Baumgartner H,Hung J,Bermejo J,Chambers JB,Evangelista A,Griffin BP,Iung B,Otto CM,Pellikka PA,Quiñones M, Echocardiographic assessment of valve stenosis: EAE/ASE recommendations for clinical practice. Journal of the American Society of Echocardiography : official publication of the American Society of Echocardiography. 2009 Jan; [PubMed PMID: 19130998] |
[3] | Brink HL,Dickerson JA,Stephens JA,Pickworth KK, Comparison of the Safety of Adenosine and Regadenoson in Patients Undergoing Outpatient Cardiac Stress Testing. Pharmacotherapy. 2015 Dec [PubMed PMID: 26684552] |
[4] | Wolk MJ,Bailey SR,Doherty JU,Douglas PS,Hendel RC,Kramer CM,Min JK,Patel MR,Rosenbaum L,Shaw LJ,Stainback RF,Allen JM, ACCF/AHA/ASE/ASNC/HFSA/HRS/SCAI/SCCT/SCMR/STS 2013 multimodality appropriate use criteria for the detection and risk assessment of stable ischemic heart disease: a report of the American College of Cardiology Foundation Appropriate Use Criteria Task Force, American Heart Association, American Society of Echocardiography, American Society of Nuclear Cardiology, Heart Failure Society of America, Heart Rhythm Society, Society for Cardiovascular Angiography and Interventions, Society of Cardiovascular Computed Tomography, Society for Cardiovascular Magnetic Resonance, and Society of Thoracic Surgeons. Journal of the American College of Cardiology. 2014 Feb 4 [PubMed PMID: 24355759] |
[5] | Gulsin GS,Abdelaty AMSEK,Shetye A,Lai FY,Bajaj A,Das I,Deshpande A,Rao PPG,Khoo J,McCann GP,Arnold JR, Haemodynamic effects of pharmacologic stress with adenosine in patients with left ventricular systolic dysfunction. International journal of cardiology. 2019 Mar 1 [PubMed PMID: 30528627] |
[6] | Alzahrani T,Zeltser R, Adenosine SPECT Thallium Imaging . 2020 Jan [PubMed PMID: 30725755] |
[7] | Bokhari S,Ficaro EP,McCallister BD Jr, Adenosine stress protocols for myocardial perfusion imaging. Journal of nuclear cardiology : official publication of the American Society of Nuclear Cardiology. 2007 May-Jun; [PubMed PMID: 17556176] |
[8] | Klocke FJ,Baird MG,Lorell BH,Bateman TM,Messer JV,Berman DS,O'Gara PT,Carabello BA,Russell RO Jr,Cerqueira MD,St John Sutton MG,DeMaria AN,Udelson JE,Kennedy JW,Verani MS,Williams KA,Antman EM,Smith SC Jr,Alpert JS,Gregoratos G,Anderson JL,Hiratzka LF,Faxon DP,Hunt SA,Fuster V,Jacobs AK,Gibbons RJ,Russell RO, ACC/AHA/ASNC guidelines for the clinical use of cardiac radionuclide imaging--executive summary: a report of the American College of Cardiology/American Heart Association Task Force on Practice Guidelines (ACC/AHA/ASNC Committee to Revise the 1995 Guidelines for the Clinical Use of Cardiac Radionuclide Imaging). Journal of the American College of Cardiology. 2003 Oct 1; [PubMed PMID: 14522503] |
[9] | Lette J,Tatum JL,Fraser S,Miller DD,Waters DD,Heller G,Stanton EB,Bom HS,Leppo J,Nattel S, Safety of dipyridamole testing in 73,806 patients: the Multicenter Dipyridamole Safety Study. Journal of nuclear cardiology : official publication of the American Society of Nuclear Cardiology. 1995 Jan-Feb; [PubMed PMID: 9420757] |
[10] | Gupta A,Samarany S, Dipyridamole Nuclear Stress Test . 2020 Jan [PubMed PMID: 31335041] |
[11] | Moles VM,Cascino T,Saleh A,Mikhova K,Lazarus JJ,Ghannam M,Yun HJ,Konerman M,Weinberg RL,Ficaro EP,Corbett JR,McLaughlin VV,Murthy VL, Safety of regadenoson stress testing in patients with pulmonary hypertension. Journal of nuclear cardiology : official publication of the American Society of Nuclear Cardiology. 2018 Jun [PubMed PMID: 27896702] |
[12] | Cerqueira MD,Nguyen P,Staehr P,Underwood SR,Iskandrian AE, Effects of age, gender, obesity, and diabetes on the efficacy and safety of the selective A2A agonist regadenoson versus adenosine in myocardial perfusion imaging integrated ADVANCE-MPI trial results. JACC. Cardiovascular imaging. 2008 May; [PubMed PMID: 19356442] |
[13] | Iskandrian AE,Bateman TM,Belardinelli L,Blackburn B,Cerqueira MD,Hendel RC,Lieu H,Mahmarian JJ,Olmsted A,Underwood SR,Vitola J,Wang W, Adenosine versus regadenoson comparative evaluation in myocardial perfusion imaging: results of the ADVANCE phase 3 multicenter international trial. Journal of nuclear cardiology : official publication of the American Society of Nuclear Cardiology. 2007 Sep-Oct; [PubMed PMID: 17826318] |
[14] | Ruffolo RR Jr, The pharmacology of dobutamine. The American journal of the medical sciences. 1987 Oct [PubMed PMID: 3310640] |
[15] | Gajulapalli RD,Aneja A,Rovner A, Cardiac stress testing for the diagnosis and management of coronary artery disease: a reference for the primary care physician. Southern medical journal. 2012 Feb [PubMed PMID: 22267098] |